CNN's Ben Wyatt writes that Chosen Few, South Africa's only lesbian soccer team, was formed to help women kicked off other teams because of their orientation. Two of the players have been victims of so-called "corrective rape" — explains coach Dikeledi Sibanda, "They want to correct us, to show us what a man can do. They think that being a lesbian is immoral and uncultured." But Sibanda says soccer has given her the motivation to bear up under the stigma she faces:

I love football, it is the only thing that kept me going when I was being hurt by what was happening at home and in my community. Soccer is my life.

The games in Johannesburg have clearly enlivened that life — and those of her teammates. Says Ntombi "Khampi" Futhi,

I watched many, many World Cup games. I'm really enjoying it [and now] I want to be like Siphiwe Tshabalala [the scorer of South Africa's sensational opening goal of the event]. The way he ran through the ball and struck the shot... I want to be like him, I want those skills — I love that goal so much!

Stories about women's sports in South Africa haven't been so happy recently — and some have expressed fears that the World Cup could increase violence against women worldwide. In the midst of all this, it's nice to remember that athletics can actually be empowering — in this case, for a group society tries hard to disempower.